"Darlene Adams"
Some people disappear in crowded spaces. Not Louise McKinney. You could not miss her - her beauty, her lovely smile, her laugh, her witty banter, her gorgeous clothing, and her facility with the King's English. Louise stood out. She was a shining spark. An energy magnet. She created light in the darkness.
Louise was an educator, philanthropist entrepreneur and patron of the arts. An informal counselor to many, she was described recently by a hospital visitor as "mother to a thousand." Louise McKinney was delighted with the many avenues of her life. And in every path of her life, she was indeed exceptional.
Louise Jones McKinney was born in Cleveland, Ohio, the eldest child of John Lee Jones and Laura Lee Stewart Jones. She and her younger brother, Sonny (John, Jr.) were raised in a home filled with music, friends and neighbors, love and lessons about the importance of faith, compassion and integrity. This home was also filled with delicious aromas from her mother's marvelous cooking and baking, skills that somehow eluded Louise's brilliance.
And it was clear very early that Louise had a brilliant mind. She questioned everything. She wanted to know...everything. Her parents made certain that she had everything. Mrs. Jones ensured that Louise had piano lessons and was exposed to the classical arts - the ballet and the opera - as well as to many different forms of theater. Mr. Jones monitored Louise's homework, though it was hardly necessary, alternately taking her apples and potato chips or pints of ice cream and warm pecan rolls while she studied. Her parents enrolled Louise in best schools. An honors graduate of Cleveland's multiracial Glenville High School where she was part of student government, Louise then attended Flora Mather College for Women in Cleveland graduating summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. A Greek and Latin scholar, Louise was Mather's first student in many years to win the Emma Maud Perkins Prize for excellence in classical studies.
As a member of the Antioch Baptist Church, Louise had long been aware of a handsome older boy- then young man - then man - named Samuel McKinney. Samuel's influential father, the Rev. Dr. Wade Hampton McKinney, was the church's pastor. As Samuel began to try his ministerial wings, Louise found herself in a wedding that he performed. Rev. McKinney the Younger asked her on a date; she accepted his request. Though they traveled to their destination on a yellow city bus (which did not please Louise), she found him so delightful, smart, and engaging that a 1953 wedding was soon in the offing.
The McKinney's arrived in Seattle in 1958. Louise was not the stereotype of a typical minister's wife. She was not shy and retiring, she spoke her mind, never wore hats and determined her own path. Daughters Lora-Ellen and Rhoda Eileen are the progeny of Samuel and Louise's union. Louise loved them dearly and trained them to be just like her. She frequently regretted having done so.
Once in Seattle, Louise focused her laser-like attention on elementary education, believing without a doubt that all children can learn, that all teachers can be trained to teach all children, and that all educational organizations could be structured to make learning fun for students and hold administrators strictly accountable for maintaining excellent educational systems.
To encourage community students to toward academic excellence, Mrs. McKinney created the Mount Zion Scholarship Ministry and the Mount Zion Scholarship Endowment for those students who warranted scholarships and grants-in-aid by virtue of their grade point averages. The Scholarship Ministry has often raised more funds for distribution than any in the National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. The Endowment will ensure the longevity of scholarships for years to come.
Following her retirement from the Seattle Public School District in 1994, Mrs. McKinney turned her attention to entrepreneurial pursuits. Concerned that African Americans did not have a mortuary to best meet their needs, she invested in Southwest Mortuary and became Chair of its Board of Directors. Interested in pursuits in the business community, Mrs. McKinney became a partner in and served until her death as Treasurer of The Hudson Group, which ran several airport businesses.
Her work in a number of venues in the Seattle community also brought her considerable joy. She was on the boards of directors of organizations that served seniors, persons with HIV and AIDS, and her two main foci, scholarships for youth and theater. Louise loved her 30 years on the Board of Directors for A Contemporary Theater, ten years as Co-Chair of the Community Outreach Committee of the Intiman Theater, and her role as a Founder of Town Hall, known as Seattle's community cultural center.
Yes, Louise Jones McKinney stood out. She gleamed like the sun. She shone like the moon. And she left enough life and light in her wake that we needn't worry that she left us unexpectedly. In many very important ways, she is still here.
Her husband, Rev. Samuel Berry McKinney, her daughters, Dr. Lora-Ellen McKinney of Renton and Rhoda McKinney Jones of Doylestown, PA, son-in-law Sam Henry Jones, Jr., grandson, Kent McKinney Jones, brother John Jones, Jr. of Cleveland, Ohio, a host of nieces and nephews and grand-pup Duke Ellington Jones survive Mrs. McKinney. She is also deeply missed by countless children to whom she did not give birth and many, many others.
"Darlene Adams"
"My thoughts and prayers are with you. I have thought of Louise so many times and quite often withing these last two months, especially the wonderful example and model of a principal who knew that all children can and will learn. Thank you for sharing her and letting her share her gifts to let others know that it is possible to have schools where this happens with a good instructional leader. In Providence, Maribeth Carson"
"God is in control, may you find comfort in his arms.A life well lived!"
"Debbie Killinger"
"Mommy, I heard a Harry Belafonte song today and could not stop crying. You are everywhere and while you are free of all pain, I selfishly want you with me. I miss you more than my words could ever express. You've worked hard. Take your rest. I love you. Your baby daughter, Rhoda"
"Carol Petrow and family"
"As I looked around yesterday in Mt. Zion Church at her homegoing Celebration I said only she and Doctor McKinney could bring all the old and new members together united on one accord. Oh the love that was showed for the McKinney family. I truly miss Lady Louise she was such a beautiful and delightful first lady.I remember one day she had us laughing when she talked about thinking she would never recover from writing the checks to Columbia University and when she shared sad moments we cried with her.May God Bless and keep the McKinney Family in perfect peace."
"Rev. McKinney, Rhoda and Family Remembering you today and praying for your strength today."
"My Dearest Louise, I will always remember our wonderful conversation about life, our faith and the joy of just "being" Love you, Michele"
"Dr. Michele Ada Holmes-Alston"
"David & D'Arlene Lindenberg, Livermore CA"
"Jones/Gray Family,Nashville TN"
"Your spirit is a constant presence in those of us who you have mentored and modeled in the field of education. I still refer to your infamous orange memorandums sharing your best thinking on how we teach and how children learn. As I celebrated my birthday, little did I know you would ascend to your final home on the same day. Many thanks for your powerful presence and know that I, too, continue forth in the important work that we share to empower all children to learn. Blessed journey! "
"Rev. Lawrence Hargrave & Brenda D. Lee"
"Gwendolyn Elizabeth Alexander Durham"
"Larry Thomas Alexander"
"Carmelia Faith Alexander Henderson"
"Mrs. McKinney was elegant, inspiring and faithful to her community and church. She set an example of grace, caring and achievement for women, both young and older. She was especially fun to be around. I am thankful to have had her as my second Mom. Memory Eternal!"
"McKinney Family Thinking of you with sympathy. Linda R and Melvina Jones"
"Linda R. and Melvina Jones"
"Mattie Taplin"
"Deepest condolences and sympathies from the entire Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School community over the death of your dear wife."
"Arita Damroze"
"Delphine Pruitt"
"I am sad that your mom Mrs. Louise Jones McKinney has passed. When I first started preaching she would come at Mt. Zion. I was just 21 years old and I needed her support. She was bright, intelligent, and a supporter of all of us. I have been so blessed by knowing Rev. Samuel Berry McKinney & Mrs. Louise Jones McKinney. Rev. Stephen Lloyd Johnson"
"Vada Oliver & Christina (Hyattsville, MD)"
"It doesn't get worse than loosing a life partner or a mother, except when that person is someone as special as Louise McKinney. My condolences to Rev. McKinney and both his daughters for this unimaginable loss. "
"Mother, I love and will miss you."
"Lora-Ellen McKinney"
"With heartfelt sympathy from the staff at Washelli"